120 Years of Electronic Music
Electronic Musical Instrument 1870 - 1990
The 'Clavier à Lampes' (1927) The 'Orgue des Ondes" (1929),
The Piano Radio-Électrique (1929), The 'Givelet' (1930)
The 'Clavier à Lampes'
Armand Givelet , an engineer and physicist at the radio laboratory at the Eiffel Tower in collaboration with the organ builder Eduard Eloi Coupleaux produced their first instrument the 'Clavier à Lampes' in 1927. The 'Clavier à Lampes' was a monophonic vacuum tube oscillator instrument.

In 1928 Givelet demonstrated his technique of 'silent recording' or direct injection. This was a solution to the problem of recording music with microphones for radio broadcast, the microphones of the day being of very low quality, Givelet's solution was to connect his electronic instruments directly into the radio transmitter or sound recorder.

Armand Givelet and his "wave Organ" 1933
The 'Orgue des Ondes" (1929)
Givelet and Coupleaux's second instrument was the 'Orgue des Ondes' or 'Wave Organ' in 1929 . The wave Organ was designed as a cheap replacement for pipe organs used to play the popular music of the day and as a way of getting around the problem of recording and transmitting radio broadcast music using microphones - microphones at this time were still crude and unsuitable for recording music, the "Wave Organ" could be plugged straight into an amplifier or radio transmitter, bypassing microphones completely.
Givelet's instrument was based on the same technology, vacuum lamp oscillators, as the Theremin and Ondes-Martenot but the "Wave Organ" had an oscillator for each key therefore the instrument was polyphonic, a distinct advantage over its rivals despite the amount of room needed to house the huge machine.

The organ had over 700 vacuum oscillator tubes to give it a pitch range of 70 notes and ten different timbres - for each different timbre a different set of tubes was used. The Organ may have used as many as 1,000 tubes in total for oscillators and amplifiers. The sound of the organ was said to be particullarly rich due to small variations in the tuning between each note creating a chorus like effect - infact, the organ was capable of an early type of additive (addition of sine or simple waveforms) and subtractive (filtering comlex waveforms) synthesis due to its number of oscillators and distortion of the sine waves produced by the LC oscillators.

The "Wave Organ" eventually succumbed to the popularity and portability of the American built Hammond Organ.

The multiple oscillators of the "Orgue-des-ondes"
The Piano Radio-Électrique (1929)
The Piano Radio-Électrique was a small electric organ type instrument equipped with the player piano mechanism of the Orgue-des-ondes controlling a set of oscillators mounted in a separate cabinet, it could be accompanied on the piano played manually or using a second electropneumatic system controlled by the player piano.
The Coupleaux -Givelet Organ' or 'Givelet' (1930)
The keyboards of the 'Givelet'
Givelet and Coupleaux's last know instrument was the 'Coupleaux -Givelet Organ' or 'Givelet'. The Givelet was a unique instrument that combined vacuum tube oscillators with a sound control system using a punched paper roll in a way similar to a player piano to define the sound synthesis. Pitch, volume, attack, envelope, tremolo and timbre could be controlled by cutting and splicing paper rolls and like the "Wave Organ", the Givelet was polyphonic. The technique of using punched paper "programs" was not exploited until fifteen years later in the 1950's with the RCA Synthesiser.

Givelets and Coupleaux's instrument was designed to be a commercial and cheap replacement for pipe organs and utilise the ability for 'silent recording'. The Givelets were installed in churches around France and at a broadcasting radio station in Paris. The Givelet eventually lost out commercially to the American Hammond Organ

Sources:
A.J.Givelet: 'Les Instruments de Musique à oscillations électriques: Le Clavier à Lampes ', Génie civil, xciii (1928)
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